Divorce Attorney Questions - Emotional Child Abuse
As a general proposition, courts consider emotional child abuse to be a recent act or failure to act on the
part of a parent, guardian, teacher, or caretaker, which results in death, serious physical or emotional harm,
or an act or failure to act which presents an imminent risk of serious harm. Divorce attorneys usually rely upon
expert opinions rendered by child psychologists and psychiatrists to prove emotional harm.
When meeting with a divorce attorney for the first time
A series of important events begins to unfold when meeting with a divorce attorney for the first time. Instinctively, you
cannot help but observe the professional environment of each law office. You will know within the first few minutes if you would
be confident allowing this firm to represent your legal needs in a public forum. Take notes before you go. Ask all
legal questions you
consider important. Most attorneys offer free first consultations, and the few minutes you spend interviewing
several attorneys will
provide you with a firm foundation of free legal advice. Divorce attorneys are skeptical when signing new clients
who demand unreasonable results. Aggressive behavior is a common trait among trial lawyers, yet client
aggressiveness demanding unreasonable expectations is seldom productive. Talk to attorneys. Tell them what you
think is reasonable, and tell them what you want. They will provide you with estimated results and fees, and
free legal advice based on current laws. All information you provide an attorney regarding your case is protected by the
attorney client privilege. Confidential information cannot be divulged, and is essential to allow any attorney
to create the best possible course of action based upon credible, admissible evidence. |